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spursncowboys
12-18-2012, 08:19 PM
http://espn.go.com/college-football/bowls12/story/_/id/8755799/between-big-12-pac-12-there-no-debating-which-league-nation-no-2-college-football


There's not a league that can compete with the Big 12's depth, and at the top of the two conferences, there's plenty of debate.


The Big 12 has clearly proved itself as the deepest league in college football

DesignatedT
12-18-2012, 08:21 PM
It's David Ubben bro.

A big 12 blogger says the big12 is better. Shocking.

DUNCANownsKOBE
12-18-2012, 08:43 PM
It's David Ubben bro.

A big 12 blogger says the big12 is better. Shocking.

:lmao

All that big 12 depth and their 4th best team lost to the Pac's 8th best team this year. The end of bowl season should give a pretty good idea as to which conference is better.

Blake
12-18-2012, 11:20 PM
Yeah Ubben is a big big 12 honk

DUNCANownsKOBE
12-18-2012, 11:29 PM
Both Oregon and Stanford won 11 games, but Stanford won only 11 games because it got to beat UCLA in consecutive weekends, counting the Pac-12 championship. Kansas State won 11, but Oklahoma won 10 games with losses to K-State and national title participant Notre Dame.

This is some amazing intellectual dishonesty. Oklahoma got walloped at home by Notre Dame, Stanford lost to Notre Dame in OT @ South Bend, yet this Big-12 cock sucker mentions one of Oklahoma's losses was to Notre Dame but doesn't mention one of Stanford's losses was too. There's no way around the fact him using Notre Dame to prop up Oklahoma but not Stanford is bias and dishonest.

Bill_Brasky
12-19-2012, 10:33 AM
Both conferences looked very good at the midway point of the season, then the B12 went on a huge streak retarded, head scratching play that resulted in losses for their better schools while teams like Oregon, Stanford etc in the Pac played well at the end of the season. Right now OU is our best team and there are 2-3 in the Pac that could beat them soundly and a few more that could give them a game.

Basically, even though MBTF has Texas in the shitter and OU isn't great, no other team in the B12 seems to want to emerge.

stretch
12-19-2012, 08:14 PM
Top to bottom, I guess you could technically say Big-12 is the best conference in college football, since they only had one team in the whole conference with a below .500 record. But that doesn't really mean much. SEC is extremely top heavy, while their bottom schools blow, but at least they have been winning championships. Pac-12 is the most bipolar conference every year. You never know what to expect from them. They have had a very solid year, but next year they could end up being complete crap. Big 12 and SEC generally will have a solid 3 teams that are making pushes for the national title or BCS bowls. Pac-12 is kinda random. That's the way it seems to me anyways, maybe I'm wrong. Too lazy to look it up.

FWIW, I don't get why people get so worked up over conference pride. It's stupid. It's every bit as stupid as getting worked up over whether the East or the West wins the championship in the NBA, or the AFC/NFC in football. WGAF?

Sisk
12-19-2012, 10:08 PM
FWIW, I don't get why people get so worked up over conference pride. It's stupid. It's every bit as stupid as getting worked up over whether the East or the West wins the championship in the NBA, or the AFC/NFC in football. WGAF?

Not true. The SEC going to more/better bowls = more money for the rest of the conference.

DesignatedT
12-19-2012, 10:21 PM
Being apart of a collegiate conference is much different then being apart of a pro sport conference. It covers nearly every sport + academics. A lot of reasons to take pride in what conference you are apart of and to want your conference to succeed.

Blake
12-19-2012, 10:21 PM
UT, OU and KST need to go at least 2-1 between the three of them this bowl season.

0-3 would be brutal for the conference.

stretch
12-19-2012, 10:36 PM
Not true. The SEC going to more/better bowls = more money for the rest of the conference.


Being apart of a collegiate conference is much different then being apart of a pro sport conference. It covers nearly every sport + academics. A lot of reasons to take pride in what conference you are apart of and to want your conference to succeed.

Which is retarded IMO. Why do shit schools feel their dicks get bigger, when big-time schools are more successful than them? How about do well in your own sports and academics, instead of relying on others to do work for you?

I understand how that works and all, but it's still retarded to be rooting for your biggest rivals, simply for the sake of your conference. Not much of a rivalry, nor much competition IMO. It basically gives people reason to not try their hardest if they are simply going to rely on other teams/schools to be successful and mooch off of them.

dirk4mvp
12-19-2012, 10:41 PM
Not true. The SEC going to more/better bowls = more money for the rest of the conference.

Where's all this money at tbh? Can they direct deposit a little bit into my bank account?

DesignatedT
12-19-2012, 10:41 PM
Some schools don't have the resources as other schools lol. It isn't a level playing field tbqh.

DUNCANownsKOBE
12-19-2012, 11:29 PM
The fact B-12 fans don't see how retarded the, "Look how many of our teams are over .500!" argument is is pretty amazing. It's so logically flawed and stupid I don't even feel like explaining why. Anyone dumb enough to think it's a legitimate argument probably wouldn't understand why it's stupid.

And no, this isn't bias. In 2009, Pac-12 fans used the same, "We have a whole bunch of 7-8 win teams because we're really competitive!" argument and it was equally dumb when they used it.

Sisk
12-20-2012, 12:17 AM
Which is retarded IMO. Why do shit schools feel their dicks get bigger, when big-time schools are more successful than them? How about do well in your own sports and academics, instead of relying on others to do work for you?

I understand how that works and all, but it's still retarded to be rooting for your biggest rivals, simply for the sake of your conference. Not much of a rivalry, nor much competition IMO. It basically gives people reason to not try their hardest if they are simply going to rely on other teams/schools to be successful and mooch off of them.

As "retarded" as it is - it works. What is better for the conference as a whole makes the conference more valuable. Means more money and success for everybody. Your approach, the same as the b12's, does not work. See: Colorado, Missouri, Nebraska, Texas A&M departures.

stretch
12-20-2012, 12:32 AM
The fact B-12 fans don't see how retarded the, "Look how many of our teams are over .500!" argument is is pretty amazing. It's so logically flawed and stupid I don't even feel like explaining why. Anyone dumb enough to think it's a legitimate argument probably wouldn't understand why it's stupid.

And no, this isn't bias. In 2009, Pac-12 fans used the same, "We have a whole bunch of 7-8 win teams because we're really competitive!" argument and it was equally dumb when they used it.

No one said its a good argument. In fact, I believe I said it was pretty much meaningless.

Blake
12-20-2012, 12:40 AM
As "retarded" as it is - it works. What is better for the conference as a whole makes the conference more valuable. Means more money and success for everybody. Your approach, the same as the b12's, does not work. See: Colorado, Missouri, Nebraska, Texas A&M departures.

Why doesn't the b12's approach work?

How much more money will A&M get in the next 5-10 years than Tech?

stretch
12-20-2012, 12:57 AM
As "retarded" as it is - it works. What is better for the conference as a whole makes the conference more valuable. Means more money and success for everybody. Your approach, the same as the b12's, does not work. See: Colorado, Missouri, Nebraska, Texas A&M departures.

Interesting, because Colorado and Nebraska hasn't done crap since leaving, while Missou and A&M have just left, but Missou doesn't appear headed to being any better than they previously were, and who knows if A&M will either, because they are may end up just doing the same cycle they always do... suck for 4-5 years, have a couple years where they win some games and have a nice recruiting class, then go back to sucking for another 4-5 years. The jury is still out on those two.

And yeah, the SEC style is working great for their lesser schools, like Vandy, Ole Piss, Kentucky, Mississippi State, and Arkansas :rolleyes. Those schools are having basically no more success than teams like Missouri, A&M, Tech, K-State, and Okie State have had in the Big-12. Occasionally a breakout season here and there, but generally are just average programs that sit usually on the outskirts of the top 25 every year. Basically the only difference is the SEC is more top heavy as Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Auburn, and LSU are all highly respected football programs and have been for quite some time, while the Big-12 has only two real big name schools, Texas and Oklahoma. It's fully understandable why lesser schools would want to leave their conferences for the SEC, but it would make no sense at all for most any high-end, respectable program to leave their conference. In the end, how much of a benefit is it really, to bag some average programs?

So is it the management style that makes the SEC a superior conference than all others? Or is it the fact that they have a larger number of high-profile football programs? Take a couple of those high-profile teams away, and are they really much, if any better than the Pac-12 or Big-12? Not saying they would or wouldn't be, but I think they are legit questions.

BUMP
12-20-2012, 02:14 AM
Interesting, because Colorado and Nebraska hasn't done crap since leaving, while Missou and A&M have just left, but Missou doesn't appear headed to being any better than they previously were, and who knows if A&M will either, because they are may end up just doing the same cycle they always do... suck for 4-5 years, have a couple years where they win some games and have a nice recruiting class, then go back to sucking for another 4-5 years. The jury is still out on those two.

And yeah, the SEC style is working great for their lesser schools, like Vandy, Ole Piss, Kentucky, Mississippi State, and Arkansas :rolleyes. Those schools are having basically no more success than teams like Missouri, A&M, Tech, K-State, and Okie State have had in the Big-12. Occasionally a breakout season here and there, but generally are just average programs that sit usually on the outskirts of the top 25 every year. Basically the only difference is the SEC is more top heavy as Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Auburn, and LSU are all highly respected football programs and have been for quite some time, while the Big-12 has only two real big name schools, Texas and Oklahoma. It's fully understandable why lesser schools would want to leave their conferences for the SEC, but it would make no sense at all for most any high-end, respectable program to leave their conference. In the end, how much of a benefit is it really, to bag some average programs?

So is it the management style that makes the SEC a superior conference than all others? Or is it the fact that they have a larger number of high-profile football programs? Take a couple of those high-profile teams away, and are they really much, if any better than the Pac-12 or Big-12? Not saying they would or wouldn't be, but I think they are legit questions.

Hey stretch, do you know the procedure for when you discover a weapon that doesn't belong to you?
1. Stop
2. Dont touch
3. Leave the area
4. Tell an adult

And your mother's a whore

coyotes_geek
12-20-2012, 09:47 AM
And yeah, the SEC style is working great for their lesser schools, like Vandy, Ole Piss, Kentucky, Mississippi State, and Arkansas :rolleyes.

Apparently it's working well enough for all of those schools to stick around. There's a reason we see teams who have won a bunch of games like TCU and Boise State trying to get into the major conferences where they're not likely to win as much as they were and we don't see teams like Vandy, Kentucky, Baylor and Iowa State trying to leave those major conferences to go somewhere where they could theoretically win more games than they currently are. Conference matters. Every school that has jumped conferences over the last few years has jumped into the bigger pond, regardless of whether or not they'll be a big fish or a little fish in that bigger pond.


So is it the management style that makes the SEC a superior conference than all others?

Partly.


Or is it the fact that they have a larger number of high-profile football programs?

A bigger part.

stretch
12-20-2012, 11:07 AM
Apparently it's working well enough for all of those schools to stick around. There's a reason we see teams who have won a bunch of games like TCU and Boise State trying to get into the major conferences where they're not likely to win as much as they were and we don't see teams like Vandy, Kentucky, Baylor and Iowa State trying to leave those major conferences to go somewhere where they could theoretically win more games than they currently are. Conference matters. Every school that has jumped conferences over the last few years has jumped into the bigger pond, regardless of whether or not they'll be a big fish or a little fish in that bigger pond.

I'm not saying conference doesn't matter. It absolutely does. I just think having conference pride, to the point that you are rooting for your biggest "rival" to win in order to have "conference bragging rights" is retarded.

That, and SEC fans who constantly act like the SEC management style is the biggest reason they have been so successful over the past decade is retarded. The reason they have been successful has little to nothing to do with that, and everything to do with the fact that they have a large number of high-profile football programs. The small programs mean nothing in the grand scheme of things. It's all about how your high-profile programs are doing, and as long as they are doing well and are happy, and the voters keep a high opinion of your conference (which is tied directly to how your high-profile teams are doing), you will be fine.

spursncowboys
12-20-2012, 01:27 PM
Interesting, because Colorado and Nebraska hasn't done crap since leaving, while Missou and A&M have just left, but Missou doesn't appear headed to being any better than they previously were, and who knows if A&M will either, because they are may end up just doing the same cycle they always do... suck for 4-5 years, have a couple years where they win some games and have a nice recruiting class, then go back to sucking for another 4-5 years. The jury is still out on those two.

And yeah, the SEC style is working great for their lesser schools, like Vandy, Ole Piss, Kentucky, Mississippi State, and Arkansas :rolleyes. Those schools are having basically no more success than teams like Missouri, A&M, Tech, K-State, and Okie State have had in the Big-12. Occasionally a breakout season here and there, but generally are just average programs that sit usually on the outskirts of the top 25 every year. Basically the only difference is the SEC is more top heavy as Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Auburn, and LSU are all highly respected football programs and have been for quite some time, while the Big-12 has only two real big name schools, Texas and Oklahoma. It's fully understandable why lesser schools would want to leave their conferences for the SEC, but it would make no sense at all for most any high-end, respectable program to leave their conference. In the end, how much of a benefit is it really, to bag some average programs?

So is it the management style that makes the SEC a superior conference than all others? Or is it the fact that they have a larger number of high-profile football programs? Take a couple of those high-profile teams away, and are they really much, if any better than the Pac-12 or Big-12? Not saying they would or wouldn't be, but I think they are legit questions.
school=money
conference=tv markets.

Sisk
12-20-2012, 05:20 PM
Why doesn't the b12's approach work?

How much more money will A&M get in the next 5-10 years than Tech?

Tech is only there because they have no other choice. We will make a lot more.


Interesting, because Colorado and Nebraska hasn't done crap since leaving, while Missou and A&M have just left, but Missou doesn't appear headed to being any better than they previously were, and who knows if A&M will either, because they are may end up just doing the same cycle they always do... suck for 4-5 years, have a couple years where they win some games and have a nice recruiting class, then go back to sucking for another 4-5 years. The jury is still out on those two.

And yeah, the SEC style is working great for their lesser schools, like Vandy, Ole Piss, Kentucky, Mississippi State, and Arkansas :rolleyes. Those schools are having basically no more success than teams like Missouri, A&M, Tech, K-State, and Okie State have had in the Big-12. Occasionally a breakout season here and there, but generally are just average programs that sit usually on the outskirts of the top 25 every year. Basically the only difference is the SEC is more top heavy as Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Auburn, and LSU are all highly respected football programs and have been for quite some time, while the Big-12 has only two real big name schools, Texas and Oklahoma. It's fully understandable why lesser schools would want to leave their conferences for the SEC, but it would make no sense at all for most any high-end, respectable program to leave their conference. In the end, how much of a benefit is it really, to bag some average programs?

So is it the management style that makes the SEC a superior conference than all others? Or is it the fact that they have a larger number of high-profile football programs? Take a couple of those high-profile teams away, and are they really much, if any better than the Pac-12 or Big-12? Not saying they would or wouldn't be, but I think they are legit questions.

All of the schools that have left the b12 will make more money and get more exposure. We also are all in stable conferences. An example of just how stable the SEC is: there is no buyout clause. You can leave whenever you want.

stretch
12-20-2012, 05:40 PM
All of the schools that have left the b12 will make more money and get more exposure. We also are all in stable conferences. An example of just how stable the SEC is: there is no buyout clause. You can leave whenever you want.

And why are they making more money and getting more exposure? Because of the system? Or because of the number of high profile schools? Let's say that the SEC only had Alabama and Auburn, and take away Georgia, Florida, and LSU. How successful is the SEC and their system now?

The system only works because they have so many high end football programs. If they didn't, things would be much different, and most likely Alabama and Auburn would be wanting a Big-12 type system. They are only cool with it now, because it doesn't hurt them with the other big name schools being there and keeping the cash flow high. But without those schools helping keep the total conference income higher, they end up giving away a lot of money for absolutely nothing, and will be making considerably less than if they just kept their own rightfully earned money. The extra money they share with the other schools isn't going to make them any better of football programs. At this point, football programs are pretty much entirely based on their history. It's next to impossible for any low-profile football teams to make a leap into annually being one of the big dogs. Pretty much, what the programs are now, are what they will be for the rest of their existence. MAYBE one or two programs across the nation will get lucky and somehow make the leap into being a consistently elite program, and that's a huge maybe.

The SEC and their system works for one reason and one reason only. Which makes it even more stupid when everyone whines "oh look how greedy Texas is!!! :cry :cry :cry" If any other top school was in the same situation (basically carrying a conference with one other high profile football program), they would be wanting the exact same thing. No conference relies on one school as much as the Big-12 relies on Texas. If you take them out of the conference, its completely done. No other program can say that. And I'm not saying that is a good thing, just that it's the truth. I would prefer there being more high profile teams in the Big-12, but that's not going to happen unless they decide to create one of those "superconferences" there has been talk about in the past.

Blake
12-20-2012, 05:45 PM
Tech is only there because they have no other choice. We will make a lot more.



All of the schools that have left the b12 will make more money and get more exposure. We also are all in stable conferences. An example of just how stable the SEC is: there is no buyout clause. You can leave whenever you want.

you're talking out of your ass.

Sisk
12-20-2012, 10:53 PM
And why are they making more money and getting more exposure? Because of the system? Or because of the number of high profile schools? Let's say that the SEC only had Alabama and Auburn, and take away Georgia, Florida, and LSU. How successful is the SEC and their system now?

The system only works because they have so many high end football programs. If they didn't, things would be much different, and most likely Alabama and Auburn would be wanting a Big-12 type system. They are only cool with it now, because it doesn't hurt them with the other big name schools being there and keeping the cash flow high. But without those schools helping keep the total conference income higher, they end up giving away a lot of money for absolutely nothing, and will be making considerably less than if they just kept their own rightfully earned money. The extra money they share with the other schools isn't going to make them any better of football programs. At this point, football programs are pretty much entirely based on their history. It's next to impossible for any low-profile football teams to make a leap into annually being one of the big dogs. Pretty much, what the programs are now, are what they will be for the rest of their existence. MAYBE one or two programs across the nation will get lucky and somehow make the leap into being a consistently elite program, and that's a huge maybe.

The SEC and their system works for one reason and one reason only. Which makes it even more stupid when everyone whines "oh look how greedy Texas is!!! :cry :cry :cry" If any other top school was in the same situation (basically carrying a conference with one other high profile football program), they would be wanting the exact same thing. No conference relies on one school as much as the Big-12 relies on Texas. If you take them out of the conference, its completely done. No other program can say that. And I'm not saying that is a good thing, just that it's the truth. I would prefer there being more high profile teams in the Big-12, but that's not going to happen unless they decide to create one of those "superconferences" there has been talk about in the past.

Wait so are you talking crap about the SEC for having a ton of quality teams? And teams based on history? The SEC has how many titles in a row currently? The b12 relies heavily on Texas because they fought their way to attain that status.

Sisk
12-20-2012, 10:54 PM
you're talking out of your ass.

Which part, specifically?

stretch
12-20-2012, 11:50 PM
Wait so are you talking crap about the SEC for having a ton of quality teams? And teams based on history? The SEC has how many titles in a row currently? The b12 relies heavily on Texas because they fought their way to attain that status.

Actually I was not talking crap about the SEC at all.

lol cheering for LSU

Blake
12-21-2012, 09:08 AM
Which part, specifically?


We will make a lot more.

All of the schools that have left the b12 will make more money and get more exposure. We also are all in stable conferences.

Sisk
12-21-2012, 02:01 PM
How much money, annually, will Tech receive from the B12? Conversely, after the SEC network amounts are released in the upcoming months, what do you believe each SEC school will receive annually?

Blake
12-21-2012, 02:13 PM
How much money, annually, will Tech receive from the B12? Conversely, after the SEC network amounts are released in the upcoming months, what do you believe each SEC school will receive annually?

I'm not sure, but it's your ass that's talking. You tell me.

I know Nebraska is making a lot more money, but please show your Colorado payout numbers vs Tech's

ChumpDumper
12-21-2012, 02:23 PM
How much money, annually, will Tech receive from the B12?From the TV contract? About $20 million a year. Apparently about $1 million less than the PAC.
Conversely, after the SEC network amounts are released in the upcoming months, what do you believe each SEC school will receive annually?Probably more.

The Tech number is impressive considering there isn't a network nor is there a conference championship. The Big XII-IV+II can take their time and add only teams that really add value from here on out. Considering quite a few of its teams are in kind of laughable markets, it's a rather amazing TV deal tbh.

DesignatedT
12-21-2012, 02:34 PM
Colorado left for different reasons compared to Nebraska and A&M. Colorado wanted stability. That's exactly what they are getting with the Pac. They did not want to worry about getting stuck out in the middle of nowhere without a home.

The fact that the big12 was close to imploding and they had an offer from the Pac, which is a fairly run league with revenue sharing made it an easy decision for them. Unline the big12 who obviously has played favorites for years now and will continue to do whatever Texas wants. And yes, A&M took part in this for a long time as well (allowing them to play favorites that is).

stretch
12-21-2012, 02:43 PM
Colorado left for different reasons compared to Nebraska and A&M. Colorado wanted stability. That's exactly what they are getting with the Pac. They did not want to worry about getting stuck out in the middle of nowhere without a home.

The fact that the big12 was close to imploding and they had an offer from the Pac, which is a fairly run league with revenue sharing made it an easy decision for them. Unline the big12 who obviously has played favorites for years now and will continue to do whatever Texas wants. And yes, A&M took part in this for a long time as well (allowing them to play favorites that is).

So in other words, basically everything boils down to how many elite programs your conference has, not revenue sharing.

Sisk
12-21-2012, 03:06 PM
I'm not sure, but it's your ass that's talking. You tell me.

I know Nebraska is making a lot more money, but please show your Colorado payout numbers vs Tech's

You don't know how much revenue your school brings in from the B12?


So in other words, basically everything boils down to how many elite programs your conference has, not revenue sharing.

It's about stability, too. A team's willingness and want to be a part of their conference. As I said - conference stability is having no buyout clause. SEC has none. BE has/had a $50mm buyout. Look how that worked out.

Blake
12-21-2012, 03:08 PM
You don't know how much revenue your school brings in from the B12?

That's irrelevant.

Tell me how much a lot is when you say ”all the schools that left will make a lot more”

Sisk
12-21-2012, 03:13 PM
That's irrelevant.


It's irrelevant when it's one of the factors that determines how much "a lot more" is?

stretch
12-21-2012, 03:18 PM
It's about stability, too. A team's willingness and want to be a part of their conference. As I said - conference stability is having no buyout clause. SEC has none. BE has/had a $50mm buyout. Look how that worked out.

What makes a conference more stable? More elite programs. Why was there any sense of worry of instability for the Big-12? Because Texas had thoughts of leaving. If they left, the Big-12 is dead. However if Alabama left the SEC, they would still be fine.

Everything boils down to the programs, whether its how much money is made/shared, how stable the program is, the level of competition, etc... the elite programs run the conferences. The Big-12 simply has less elite programs, so everyone wants to blame everything bad on Texas, but if the SEC was completely reliant on Alabama, because they had a lack of elite programs, they would look every bit as bad and unstable as the Big-12 looked (probably worse), regardless of revenue sharing or the other things that SEC nuthuggers want to say make the SEC "stable".

DUNCANownsKOBE
12-21-2012, 03:20 PM
The SEC is the best conference in the country because the most freakish athletes come out of Louisiana, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, etc. and it's pretty much that simple. To try to chalk SEC success up to great conference management or some other jerkoff reason is asinine. The SEC is the best conference because DeAndre ######beast grew up 50 miles from LSU's campus and has the genes that survived generations of slave labor.

Blake
12-21-2012, 03:21 PM
It's irrelevant when it's one of the factors that determines how much "a lot more" is?

So you don't know how much my school makes.

Ass. Talking.

...and CDlolutsa even threw you a bone.

stretch
12-21-2012, 03:25 PM
The SEC is the best conference in the country because the most freakish athletes come out of Louisiana, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, etc. and it's pretty much that simple. To try to chalk SEC success up to great conference management or some other jerkoff reason is asinine.

This.

They have the highest number of elite football programs (in large part to having the best area for football recruiting in the nation), therefore they are the #1 conference.

The Reckoning
12-23-2012, 04:59 AM
pretty sure this thread is exclusively about big xii vs pac 12

DMX7
12-23-2012, 12:45 PM
The Tech number is impressive considering there isn't a network nor is there a conference championship. The Big XII-IV+II can take their time and add only teams that really add value from here on out. Considering quite a few of its teams are in kind of laughable markets, it's a rather amazing TV deal tbh.

Yeah, it is. Big XII can pretty much thank the University of Texas for the deal. Beebe said it himself -- that the conference is viable as long as Texas is there.

Blake
12-23-2012, 03:33 PM
Yeah, it is. Big XII can pretty much thank the University of Texas for the deal. Beebe said it himself -- that the conference is viable as long as Texas is there.

And to a slightly lesser extent, Oklahoma.

Everyone else is expendable

Vito Corleone
12-24-2012, 02:02 PM
And to a slightly lesser extent, Oklahoma.

Everyone else is expendable

Did aggsy fan notice that Cox cable will now carry the LHN? They are the first, with the package deal that ABC/ESPN is offering you will see all the major players pick it up including the SEC channel so thanks to the SEC everyone will get the LHN. So next year when Direct TV begins to carry the LHN I will call them up and claim to be an upset aggsy fan and threaten to cancel so I get more free stuff.

DesignatedT
12-24-2012, 02:18 PM
lol nobody gives a shit about the LHN and who offers it.

benefactor
12-24-2012, 02:42 PM
If Dish adds it they'd better bundle it with the sports package they already offer. I'm not paying any extra to get it. Pretty sure that's what they would do though.

leemajors
12-24-2012, 05:08 PM
I wouldn't want to pay more with DirecTV either.

DMX7
12-25-2012, 03:53 AM
Once AT&T U-verse finds its way into my area, I'll be switching to get LHN. I had it before I moved, now I don't. :(

leemajors
12-28-2012, 09:32 AM
Baylor tapped that UCLA ass.

DUNCANownsKOBE
12-28-2012, 09:54 AM
lol UCLA
lol not showing up for their bowl game
lol shitty athletics program
lol disgrace to the Pac
lol UofA's shitty ass team having the Pac's only win so far
lol me actually believing this fucked conference was making progress in football
lol adding Utah and Colorado
lol Pac-12